Meredith Herald January 17, 2001 Campus Opinion Bush’s cabinet bare From the Editor Well, we finally have a president. After weeks of wailing and nights of watching MSNBC and CNN, in December the nation finally learned who would lead the country for the next four years. Amid much debate and controversy, George W. Bush was declared the winner of the November Presidential election. So, in the past few weeks. Bush has been nominating the people who will be his closest political advisers and. in some cases, conspirators, in the next four years. Bush’s choices for cabinet positisions leave much to be desired, especially for those who arc more moderate on the political spec trum. Indeed. Bush’s nominees for cabinet positions include for Secretary of the Interior, Gail Norton, who once worked under James Watt, an opponent and bitter foe of environmental groups All U.S. citizens can expect from Norton and Bush is explo ration in the Alaskan National Reserve for untapped oil in a vain attempt to avoid Hnding other alternatives to our obsessive and fossil fuel dependent .society. In addition, the nominee for attorney general, John Ashcroft, is simply Bush’s nod to the Religious Right, to the right-wing, con servative, fundamental people that still rear their heads from lime to time on issues such as abortion, civil rights and the environ ment. Ashcroft is no exception to this common perception of the Religious Right; indeed, his track record on both abortion and civil rights has more moderate Republicans and DemiKrats alike scratching their heads al Bush's selection. He is, in fact, an oppt>- nent of abortion and his loyalty to ensuring civil rights is ques tionable. North Carolina Senator John Edwards (D) is jusl one of those who has vocalized conccrns about Ashcroft's nomination. With Bush’s inauguration this Saturday, Jan. 20, and the Senate hearings next week for cabinet approval, we are nearing the date that will determine our country’s fate for the next four year.s? Do we want to ignore and cover up environmentalists, feminists and civil rights advocates'? If all Bush's cabinet selections go through, that will certainly be the case. Meredith Herald Editor in Chief..., Leslie Maxwell Associate Editcn-..,, Copy Editor........... Layout EdilOT.„...... News Editor. ..... .Christina Holder Stephanie JcardaR Leesha Austin ....Jenny Costa Rep(Mters. ..Hilary Allen, Jennifer Boyce, Elizabeth Crowder, Lind.sey McAdams, Betsy Rhame, Christy Sadler, Joni Smith, Tracy Sumner, Lora Tillman, Heather Thomson, Jamie Tunnell, Tanesha Williams, Lisa Wilson WicMographers. Distribution Faculty Adviser.. .. Emily Collins, Eiizateth Davis .Hilary Allen, Jennifer Boyce Dr. Rebecca Duncan Editorial Policv; The Meredith Herald is published by the College throughout the academic year. The paper is funded by the College and through independent advertising. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns do not necessarily rcflect those of the college administra tion. faculty w student body. If you have an anicle idea for the staff, contact the office at 760- 2824. You can also e-mail the paper at max welll @meredith.edu>. I Dream of Jimmy Chkistina Holdrr Associate Editor They were flying some where over Virginia when my grandfather broke the news. My dad, only twelve then, had looked up into my grandfa ther’s face not knowing quite what to anticipate. The two were on their way to Washing ton, D.C.. and Dad had never been before. “Son, you belter begin think ing about what you are going to say to Caroline," he said in a serious voice. My dad, confused, waited for my grandfather to explain. “We are having dinner with the Kennedy’s tonight.” And what began as harmless humor to lighten the thick, stuffy air in the crowded plane, turned into the controlling thought in my father’s head. My dad was never supposed to buy it. At least that’s what my grandfather thought. But Dad's head had already begun spinning as he began shifting nervously. What would he say to Caroline Kennedy? He loosened the top button on his white-collared shirt. What do you say to a president's daughter anyway? It wa.sn’t until well into the day, as the two passed the Capitol, that my grandfather reassured my father that dinner with the Kennedy’s was merely a joke. Dad blew a sigh of relief. Grandfather chuckled. And they walked on. 1 chuckled too, as I thought of the story standing in line outside of Quail Ridge Books last Thursday sometime around 5 p.m.. Well, I was standing in the vicinity of Quail Ridge. I was actually about 1000 people back, wrapped around the shopping center and standing on Ridge Road. Jimmy Carter, thirty-ninth president of the United States, was somewhere inside, dutiful ly surrounded by secret service agents, and 1 was going to meet him. He was at Quail Ridge promoting his new book An Hour Before Daylight, a mem oir of his childhood growing up in rural Georgia. When 1 walked from my dorm room across screaming- Wade Avenue traffic to the store, I was only half-prepared for the crowd that awaited. My friend Sarah had warned me that when she had dropped by the store earlier that day, people had already set up camp, firmly seated in lawn chairs placed around the book aisles. According to her, they had been there since 2 p.m. Carter was scheduled to sign books only from 6 until 8, and due to a shoulder injury, the booksellers warned the crowd there was no guarantee he would gel through the entire line. Still, I took my place, deciding that it was worth a try to meet a former president of the United Stales. Bui what would I say to him? I didn't want to sound like everyone else, exploding with some drippy, saccharine monologue that he would never remember. I wanted to sound refined, intellectual, apprecia tive. Afterall. I respected him for his character, even if he didn't have the greatest presi dency. So the first hour I tossed , around conversation starters. President Carter, your work with Habitat for Humanity is a model for all American people. My sister and I aren't getting along. Can you teach me how to master a peace talk? Jimmy, great to see you! How is Rosalynn? And then I did that for the second and third hour too. Occasionally my concentra tion would break as the line ahead ebbed inside the store and I moved a few feet for ward. But I always returned to the same thoughts that could not seem to match the search for the perfect opening. So 1 began doing what any journalist would. I began talk ing to the people around me for some ideas. No luck. 1 flipped open the book and began read ing, hoping to be inspired by a passage that I could comment upon. Still no luck. In the back of my head, I envisioned my own ten-minute conversation with Jimmy talk ing about school, politics and the good old days. When I finally got inside the store shortly after eight. I began to feel the same nervous ness my dad must have felt anticipating what he would say to Caroline Kennedy. As my line flowed into the store, 1 searched for Jimmy. 1 assumed he was near the back considering the glop of people (hat seemed to bounce around in that area. I considered mak ing a beeline for the huddle, but then I caught a glimpse of the clerks directing traffic in front of me. They stood stoically at strategic places amid the book shelves looking like the stern (icket-takers al the Ferris wheel. And as I looped around the dictionaries and travel books, 1 accordingly fell like a kid wait ing in that never-ending amusement park line. When I rounded the final corner before reaching the table where the President sat waving his pen across pages, a clerk stopped me and told me to open my book to the title page. Finally as I stepped up to the table, a clerk took my bK)k and began .sliding it across the table like it was a non-perish able being scanned at the gro cery store, as she did the book after mine and on and on down the line. Carter, who was wildly sign ing title page.s, looked up peri odically to smile and say “hello.” He looked up to the man in front of me and the woman behind me. But his head was down when I passed. “Hi, nice to meet you,(hank you, bye," I said with more speed (han grace. I passed on through, feeling like one of (he sheep passing through the checkout line in John Updike's “A & P.” It was so very disappointing. I had waited over three hours to meet Jimmy Carter, former President of the United States. I didn't get to say anything to him. 1 didn't even get to shake his hand. And the only thing that was on my mind as I opened to the title page to see “J Carter" scrawled quickly in a diagnol, was reprimanding myself for not having been one of the first one hundred in line. Then, maybe he would have sigited his full name.